Optical Techniques to Assess Cutaneous Microvascular Function in Cardiovascular Disease

Scritto il 12/01/2026
da Inka Mustajoki

IEEE Rev Biomed Eng. 2026 Jan 12;PP. doi: 10.1109/RBME.2025.3644411. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

Microcirculation is essential for maintaining tissue health and overall physiological function. Over the past few decades, various optical techniques have been developed to measure, visualize, and assess microvasculature. The skin has easily an accessible vascular bed allowing for noninvasive evaluation of microvascular function. Alterations in cutaneous microcirculation have been linked to dysfunctions in other target organs and vascular regions reinforcing the idea that cutaneous microcirculation can provide insights into systemic vascular conditions. Currently, there is no unified review focusing specifically on microcirculation-related optical techniques nor comprehensive analyses connecting these technological innovations to clinical evidence. This review aims to bridge that gap by systematically examining the wide spectrum of optical technologies used in assessing cutaneous microvascular function. We review techniques based on non-coherent light including oximetry, photoplethysmography, and microscopic methods and coherent light-based techniques, including speckle contrast imaging, diffuse correlation spectroscopy, photoacousting imaging, laser Doppler flowmetry and self-mixing interferometry. We emphasize cardiovascular research and evaluate the clinical relevance and technical maturity of the techniques. Additionally, brief explanation of skin structure and skin microvasculature while explaining light skin interaction is discussed. Lastly, we discuss these findings on wider context by including discussions and advancements in multimodal monitoring and machine learning.

PMID:41525626 | DOI:10.1109/RBME.2025.3644411